Greg Elliott

Greg Elliott is a New Zealand sailing yacht designer.[1] He is most notable for the Elliott 6m an Olympic-class keelboat selected for the women's match racing event for the 2012 Olympics.

He has designed yachts that have won all four Blue Water Classic races, the Fastnet Race, the Transpacific Yacht Race, the Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race, and the Transatlantic Race. He has also designed several yachts that hold or held world records including Mari-Cha IV.

Early career

Greg started his career with a boat building apprenticeship in Auckland. He then started building boats to his own designs and due to their success in races around New Zealand started receiving commissions for other designs.

Youth Scheme

In 1987 the Royal New Zealand Yacht Squadron recognised they didn't have enough crew to compete in the America's Cup. They commissioned a fleet of Elliott 5.9's for their Youth Keelboat Programme. Many of New Zealand's successful America's Cup sailors learned their craft on these boats and their successors the Elliott 6. The success of the Elliott 5.9 for youth sailing schemes lead to their adoption around New Zealand.

Elliott 6m

The Elliott 6m is an Olympic-class keelboat, designed by New Zealander, Greg Elliott.[2] It was selected for the women's match racing event for the 2012 Olympics.[3] The Elliott 6m carries a spinnaker pole and symmetric spinnaker which is considered more suitable for match racing.

Mari-Cha IV

Mari-Cha IV is a sailing superyacht built as a two-masted schooner. The boat was ordered by Robert Miller with the particular goal of winning sailing records. The yacht has waterline length of 40.2 m, a width of 9.6 m, and a displacement of 50 t. It was equipped with a canting keel with a 10 t keel bulb, which is able to exert a much larger righting moment then a conventional keel.[4]

On October 9, 2003, Mari-Cha IV improved the previous record for fastest west-east transatlantic passage by a sailing monohull by more than two days, with total time of 6 days, 17h, 15m and 39s. During the run, she also won the record for longest 24h distance sailed, with 525.5 nautical miles.[5] This record was only broken 13 years later, in 2016, by Comanche.[6]

Mari-Cha IV gained particular distinction in 2005, when she broke the 100-year-old record for fastest monohull Atlantic crossing under regatta conditions (as opposed to solo runs, where the team can wait for optimal weather projections), previously established by Atlantic under Charlie Barr during the 1905 Kaiser's Cup. During the 2005 Rolex Transatlantic Challenge she beat out another Greg Elliott design Maximus for line honours and set the new record of 9 days, 15 hours, 55 minutes and 23 seconds.[7]

Maximus

Maximus is a 100 ft maxi yacht built by TP Cookson for Charles St. Clair Brown; The boat was designed by Greg Elliott and Clay Oliver and launched in Auckland[8] in February 2005.[9] For the 2005 summer sailing season in the UK, Maximus was sponsored by ICAP. She won line honours in the Fastnet Race with a time of 68 hours 2 minutes 7 seconds, though Iromiguy won on corrected time. Despite the very calm conditions, her tall rotating rigging allowed higher wind speeds some distance above the water's surface to be accessible, giving her an advantage over rivals.[10]

ICAP sponsored Maximus again for the 2006 season.[11]

Maximus was acquired by accountant Anthony Bell[12] and renamed Investec LOYAL. She underwent modifications by Greg Elliott, came second to Wild Oats XI in 2010[12] and won line honours in the 2011 Sydney to Hobart[13] in a very close race.

Designs

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gollark: Also, OC is probably not much better.
gollark: Is it?
gollark: SC is actually quite busy.
gollark: Seriously? I need captchas for every post on the new forum? And they get invalidated if I leave them too long?

See also

References

  1. "Greg Elliott". Sail-World. Retrieved January 7, 2020.
  2. "Elliott 6m". Elliott Marine. Archived from the original on 2019-04-03. Retrieved 2020-01-07.
  3. "Elliott 6 metre selected for 2012 Olympics". Sail-World.com. 2008-11-14. Retrieved 2009-08-09.
  4. Müller, Mathias; Bolle, Lars (July 10, 2003). ""Mari-Cha IV" zum Zweiten: Super-Maxi bricht eigenen 24-Stunden-Rekord". Yacht on line (in German). Retrieved September 16, 2019.
  5. "Mari-Cha IV Obliterates Transatlantic Record". sailing.org.
  6. "Commanche Smashes Transatlantic Record". Sailing World.
  7. Magazin, Yacht. ""Mari-Cha IV" holt historischen Segelrekord". YACHT.de.
  8. CharterWorld.com. "Info Page for Sailing Yacht MAXIMUS by Tp Cookson Boats". Retrieved 2011-09-29.
  9. Deidre Woollard (2006-05-06). "Maximus Yacht For Sale". Archived from the original on September 29, 2011. Retrieved 2011-09-29.CS1 maint: unfit url (link)
  10. International Sailing Federation (2005-08-10). "ICAP Maximus Finishes". Archived from the original on September 29, 2011. Retrieved 2011-09-29.CS1 maint: unfit url (link)
  11. Cowes Online (2007-06-14). "ICAP to sponsor new Leopard". Archived from the original on September 29, 2011. Retrieved 2011-09-30.CS1 maint: unfit url (link)
  12. Sails Magazine (2011-08-23). "Credible threat to Wild Oats XI". Archived from the original on September 29, 2011. Retrieved 2011-09-29.CS1 maint: unfit url (link)
  13. "Investec LOYAL race winner as appeal dismissed". Sydney Morning Herald. AAP. 29 December 2011. Retrieved 29 December 2011.
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